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Forced Vaccines Haunt Gulf Vets

By Elliot Borin

02:00 AM Nov. 07, 2002 PT

 

It was, the doctor at the Long Beach Veteran's Administration

Hospital said, an incidental finding. A little gray smudge on the

X-ray, a blob next to the pituitary gland.

 

Six months later, University of California at Los Angeles surgeons

worked six hours to sever a tumor from the brain of a muscular,

25-year-old ex-Special Forces Ranger and Gulf War veteran. The costly

surgery was performed at UCLA, the patient said, because VA doctors

denied that the " incidental finding " caused his excruciating,

unremitting headaches.

 

He blamed Army-administered drugs for the tumor. And his girlfriend

said there were other " side effects " of his service in the Gulf,

including increased agitation and sperm that " burned. "

 

" We had a third day of shots before we went over (to the Gulf), " said

the ex-Ranger, who requested anonymity because his Army Reserve

commitment has yet to expire. " Guys in other units only had two, but

most Rangers had three. They wouldn't tell us what they were for. "

 

Are this young man and tens of thousands of other veterans suffering

from Gulf War sickness victims of coincidences beyond the Pentagon's

control? Or are they casualties of a government that trampled both

the Nuremberg Code and its own policies against forced medical

experimentation?

 

Ruling in the 1947 trial of 23 Nazi doctors and medical

administrators charged with crimes against humanity during World War

II, judges of the American Tribunal in Nuremberg set forth 10

conditions for permissible medical experiments.

 

In a February 1953 directive, Defense Secretary Charles Wilson

established what is still the " law of the land " governing such

experimentation. Consistent with the Nuremberg Code, the directive's

cornerstone is voluntary consent.

 

" The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential, "

Wilson wrote, ordering that such consent be given in writing before

at least one witness. Wilson also banned use of " force, fraud,

deceit, duress, over-reaching or other ulterior form of constraint or

coercion " in obtaining consent.

 

Did the Pentagon obey this directive during the Gulf War?

 

According to Dr. Jane M. Orient, executive director of the

Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, it did not.

 

The administration of experimental drugs without consent was, Orient

said, " the first instance in which an official government agency

officially sanctioned the direct violation of the Nuremberg Code. "

 

http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,56099,00.html

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